Klarna CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski has sounded the alarm on artificial intelligence, cautioning that the technology could eliminate a substantial number of knowledge-based jobs, particularly in banking, finance, and software sectors.
The Swedish fintech, widely recognized for its buy-now-pay-later services, has embraced AI to reduce costs and enhance operational efficiency. Over the past several years, Klarna’s workforce has been dramatically scaled down from 7,400 employees to roughly 3,000, following the slowdown of the fintech boom. Hiring was paused for more than a year, signaling a strategic pivot toward automation.
Despite its AI investments, Klarna has recognized the ongoing necessity for human judgment. In 2025, the company hired additional customer service staff to ensure clients can still interact with human agents, while AI is primarily deployed in underwriting and routine operations.
Reports indicate that AI currently handles two-thirds of customer chats, reducing average resolution times from 11 minutes to just 2 minutes. However, Klarna has not disclosed metrics on first-contact resolution, customer satisfaction, or complaints, raising questions about transparency and operational quality.
Siemiatkowski admitted that cost reduction had been “too predominant an evaluation factor,” prompting a partial return to human staffing for more complex customer issues. This move underscores the limitations of AI in handling nuanced or high-stakes decisions that require discretion, empathy, and judgment.
Financial institutions across Europe are preparing for the European Union’s AI Act, set to take effect in August 2026. The regulation classifies credit scoring and other consumer-facing AI applications as high risk, requiring human oversight, transparency, and clear risk management protocols. For fintechs like Klarna, this introduces both challenges and opportunities.
Software providers that offer AI-driven credit decisioning infrastructure with built-in safeguards, audit trails, and bias mitigation are likely to gain traction.
Companies will need solutions that meet compliance requirements while still harnessing AI’s efficiency benefits, creating a growing market for turnkey, regulatory-ready platforms.
Amid automation and AI adoption, Klarna is also advancing its international footprint, particularly in the UK. The company has recovered significantly from the volatility of recent years, with its IPO in September 2025 delivering a valuation of $15.1 billion.
Sequoia Capital, Klarna’s largest investor, saw a $2.7 billion gain on its investment, highlighting continued investor confidence despite workforce reductions and operational restructuring.
Klarna’s journey illustrates the delicate balance fintechs must maintain: leveraging AI to cut costs and improve service speed while ensuring adequate human oversight and transparency. As AI continues to reshape the financial sector, Siemiatkowski’s warning signals a broader conversation on the societal and economic impact of automation.
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